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Alliances and treaties between Frankish and Muslim rulers in the Middle East : cross-cultural diplomacy in the period of the Crusades
Author's preface to the English translationPrefaceIntroductionI The development of the Syrian system of autonomous lordships (c.1070-1099)The system of autonomous lordships before the First Crusade (c.1070-1099)Frankish-Muslim alliances and treaties during the First Crusade (1097-99)II Relations between the Frankish, Turkish and Arab states in the period of the Syrian autonomous lordships (1098-1158)The territorial expansion of the Frankish lordships and their integration (1098-1112/13)The paradigm of the `counter-Crusade': The Syrian lordships and the advance of Turkish allied armies from the east (1098-1128)Syrian alliance politics from the expansion of the Zengid dominions to the Frankish-Byzantine rapprochement (1128-58)III Frankish-Muslim relations in the period of Nur al-Din and Saladin (1158-92)The expansion of the `no place' doctrine and Frankish policy towards Egypt and Byzantium (1158-74)Franks, Zengids and Nizaris: The Syrian lordships confronting the expansion of the Ayyubid dominions (1174-83)Between treaty policy and confrontation, subordination and jihad: Frankish-Ayyubid relations from the peak of the party disputes in Jerusalem to the end of Saladin's life (1184-93)A glance at Frankish-Muslim relations in the thirteenth centuryIV Instruments and implications of Frankish-Muslim legal relations in the Middle East during the twelfth and thirteenth centuriesTechnicalities and validity of Frankish-Muslim treaties in the twelfth and thirteenth centuriesThe formation and function of Muslim-Frankish condominia (munasafat) in the twelfth and thirteenth centuriesConclusionsBibliographyIndexMaps
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